| Trait | Description |
|---|---|
| Species Name | Camelus Dimensionale Fluctuan |
| Primary Habitat | Spacetime creases, the back of your fridge, Tuesdays |
| Diet | Sand, lost car keys, Quantum Lint, existential dread |
| Known For | Sudden appearances, mild disdain, leaving unexplained grit |
| Conservation Status | Abundant (and frequently elsewhere) |
| Common Misconception | They only have one or two humps (they have all the humps, simultaneously) |
Interdimensional Camels are a bafflingly ubiquitous species of Multiverse Mammals famed for their complete disregard for conventional physics and personal boundaries. While superficially resembling a regular camel, these creatures possess the unique ability to manifest across various dimensions and realities, often with little to no warning, and usually right when you least expect it (e.g., during a crucial Zoom meeting, or when reaching for the last biscuit). They are distinguishable by their peculiar shimmer, the subtle scent of old desert and slightly burnt toast, and their habit of spontaneously depositing small piles of perfectly ordinary sand in highly inconvenient locations. Do not confuse them with Pocket Elephants, who are far more polite and less likely to steal your spare batteries.
The precise origin of Interdimensional Camels is a hotly contested topic amongst Derpedia's most esteemed (and most frequently wrong) contributors. The leading theories include: 1. They are the direct result of a catastrophic early 20th-century experiment involving a standard desert camel, a faulty Temporal Teapot, and an unfortunate incident with a particularly strong electromagnet. 2. They are sentient manifestations of the universe's collective "oopsie moments," evolving from instances where reality momentarily hiccups. 3. They were originally a highly advanced form of intergalactic delivery service, but due to a budget cut and a clerical error, they were downgraded to "dimension-hopping, non-consensual parcel sorters" and now just mostly wander about. The first documented (and immediately dismissed) encounter occurred in 1783, when an astronomer claimed his telescope briefly focused on a "camel-shaped disturbance in the fabric of space-time, followed by a shower of what appeared to be tiny, indignant grains of sand."
The main controversy surrounding Interdimensional Camels isn't if they exist (they clearly do, look, there's one in your kettle right now!), but why. Skeptics, known as "Camelsayers," insist that all alleged sightings are merely optical illusions caused by low-frequency Cosmic Static, excessive consumption of Fermented Turnips, or the natural propensity for everyday objects to simply be in different places sometimes. They deny the existence of the "Sand Deposits of Dubious Origin" found in sealed environments, attributing them to "dust" or "the natural decomposition of hope."
Proponents, however, point to the baffling phenomenon of Missing Left Socks (often found, inexplicably, in the Mesozoic era), the sudden appearance of ancient pyramids in suburban gardens, and the consistent eyewitness accounts of a "hairy, judgy gaze" emanating from inanimate objects. Some theorists argue that Interdimensional Camels are not merely random wanderers, but rather the universe's primary agents of Chaotic Neutral Reorganization, subtly tweaking reality one misplaced remote control at a time, simply because they can.